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1960 CHRYSLER 300F

THIS IS THE SIXTH IN THE SERIES OF
CHRYSLER LETTER CARS. THE 1960 300F IS
CONSIDERED THE MOST DESIREABLE OF THE SERIES
AS IT REPRESENTED THE PEAK OF PERFORMANCE
AND STYLING. 1960 WAS THE FIRST YEAR OF UNIT
BODY CONSTRUCTION AND THE INTRODUCTION OF
THE CROSSRAM MANIFOLDING.
TOTAL PRODUCTION FOR 1960 WAS 1212 UNITS
CONSISTION OF 964 HARDTOPS AND 248
CONVERTABLES. 28 UNITS WERE SOLD NEW IN
CANADA AND 8 WERE EXPORTED TO EUROPE
9 300F SPECIALS WERE BUILT EQUIPPED WITH A
400 HP ENGINE AND 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION. 7 OF
THESE SPECIALS WERE USED TO ESTABLISH SPEED
RECORDS AT DAYTONA AND BONNEVILLE. THE
DAYTONA RECORD WAS 147 MPH IN THE FLYING
MILE WHILE A DUAL SUPERCHARGED 300F REACHED
A TOP SPEED OF 194 MPH DRIVEN BY ANDY
GRANETELLI.
THIS 300F WAS SOLD NEW AT TEAGUE MOTORS OF
SALEM OREGON ON SPECIAL ORDER TO LAWRENCE
AND ELEANOR POHL. THE CAR WAS DELIVERED ON
FEB 17TH 1960 AND WAS OWNED BY THE POHLS
UNTIL 1972. 3 SUBSEQUENT OWNERS OWED THE CAR
BETWEEN 1972 AND 1997 ALL IN OREGON. FROM
1997 TO AUGUST 2000 THE CAR WAS OWNED BY A
COLLECTOR IN CALIFORNIA AND WAS PURCHASED BY
ITS PRESENT OWNER IN SEPTEMBER 2000.
THE CAR IS ALL ORIGINAL INCLUDING PAINT,
UPHOLSTERY AND TRIM HAVING BEEN CAREFULLY
MAINTAINED BY ALL ITS OWNERS
THE 300F MODEL INCLUDED THE FOLLOWING
STANDARD EQUIPMENT:
- 375 HP 413 CU.IN ENGINE WITH 2 4 BBL CARBS
- TORQUEFLIGHT 3 SPEED AUTO TRANS
- 3.23 AXLE RATIO
- SOLEX TINTED GLASS
- 4 POSITION LEATHER INTERIOR
- POWER WINDOWS
OTHER OPTIONS ORDERED:
- GOLDEN TOUCH RADIO WITH REAR SPEAKER
- POWER ANTENAE
- REAR DEFOGGER
- POWER SEAT
The ownership of 8403124805
Lawrence Pohl was a plastering and lathing
contractor in Salem Oregon. In the fall of
1959 he was in the market for a special car
and was impressed by the Chrysler 300.
According to his wife Eleanor he considered
many cars but was smitten with the styling
and performance of the 300F. Although the
car was not slated for production until
January of 1960 he placed an order with
Teague Motor Company in December of 1959.
The car was delivered to its new owners on
Feb 17th 1960 and was issued Oregon plate AY
1887. In April 1960 the Pohl’s and two
friends departed for Vancouver for a trades
conference that Larry was attending. After
the conference they drove to Banff Alberta
for a vacation.(see photo)
The Pohls had three children who compromised
in sharing the two rear bucket seats and
promised not to complain. This arrangement
lasted a few years when the family bought a
station wagon for practical use.
The Chrysler continued to be used for family
trips particularly fishing trips to Newport
Oregon, towing the 22-ft boat.
Larry kept the car until 1972 when he sold
it to a friend Gary Waint of Grants Pass.
The car had accumulated 92,000 miles by the
time Larry sold it. Waint was also a lathing
contractor and kept the car until 1975.
The next owner was George Merrick of Bend
Oregon. George never titled the car as he
kept it in storage during the first three
years he owned the car. George sold the car
to friend Ken Diehl in 1978. Ken titled the
car and drove it occasionally during the two
years he owned it. During his ownership he
rebuilt the transmission, but did no other
major repairs.
By prior arrangement Ken sold the car back
to George Merrick in 1979 and George again
put the car back in storage where it
remained until 1997.
The next owners were Richard Palmer and
Henry Hopkins of Berkley CA. During their 4
years of ownership they did much maintenance
work, detailed the exterior and interior and
installed new tires. With the opportunity to
buy a 300F convertible they sold the car to
Ken Zander of San Jose CA in Sept 1999.
Ken had other car interests and found the
thought of working on the engine a daunting
task so he decided to sell in July 2000
I had the car shipped from San Jose to
Blaine WA. Work that has been completed on
the car since its arrival in BC includes
complete new brakes and full exhaust. A new
radiator and all belts and hoses have been
replaced, but other than that everything you
see here is as it left the factory in
January 1960. Tracking the History
Shortly after purchasing my 300F I began the
quest to track its history. The person whom
I bought it from only knew about the four
previous years of ownership. Among the
documents with the car was some
correspondence from the 300 club about the
car being registered in the clubs database.
A pair of Oregon Plates with expiry tags of
1979 were in the trunk. I was not certain if
these plates with the number AY 1887 had any
relevance to my car.
The correspondence started with references
to Ken Diehl of Oregon. I found Kens phone
number and contacted him. This was a good
contact as Ken was able to fill me in on the
history from 1975 to about 1997. I then
contacted George Merrick whom Ken referred
me to. As George was the owner from 1975, he
was able to fill me in on how he bought the
car in Grants Pass around 1975. George did
not recall the name of the person who he
bought the car from.
My next step was to contact Oregon DMV to
request a records search by serial number. I
was uncertain how complete their records
were but soon found out that under Oregon’s
privacy law the DMV would not release any
information to me. I was stumped. Several
club members confirmed it was impossible for
an individual to obtain records from the
state of Oregon.
I then requested the microfilm information
from Gil Cunningham. That’s when my luck
started to turn. Gil’s records showed the
selling dealer in Salem Oregon was still in
business albeit under new management. On an
otherwise slow day in March 2001 I made the
first of about 40 phone calls to trace my
car. I first contacted David Withnall of
Withnall Dodge. David was sympathetic to my
request but stated his dealer records did
not go back that far and as his father took
over from Teague Motors in 1974 they surely
had nothing prior to that.
My next series of phone calls were to
various club members in and around the Salem
area to determine if there was any
recollection of the car from new. NO Luck!
About a dozen phone calls were made to title
searching companies in the hope they could
do a vehicle search. Still no luck. The
remaining calls were made over the next two
days to various contacts. In desperation I
called the DMV back to see under what
circumstances they did release info and to
whom. I was informed that only official
agencies could request such info. Agencies
such as lawyers, insurance companies, police
and CAR DEALERS!!. I called Withell Dodge
again looking for David Withnell and spoke
to his secretary. This is when I hit the
mother lode. She referred me to Jan Landers
who did title searches and transfers for all
of the Withnell dealers.
I explained my request to Jan who replied, “
No problem, my husband is a car collector
and I do an occasional search for him. I
know exactly what you are looking for”. I
gave Jan the serial number and description
of the car and she informed me it would take
a few days to get the info back. I also
mentioned I had license plated from 1979 but
did not know if it was relevant to the car.
At this point I had no idea how much, if
any, info I would get.
I called Jan a few days later and she
confirmed she had the info back and it
contained photocopies of 4 Oregon titles
including the original title from February
1960. The original title showed the first
plate on the car as AY 1887. Pay dirt!!. I
had the packaged couriered to me and when it
arrived the next day I was in heaven as I
poured over the data.
With info on the first owners I used the
Internet People Finder to see if there was
any hope of finding a relative of Lawrence
and Eleanor Pohl. I found an E.R Pohl in
Salem and made the call. Now What I was
about to ask someone I never met, and
uncertain as to how they would react to
someone intruding about their privacy, left
me choosing my words carefully. Say the
wrong thing and get nothing!
“Mrs. Pohl, My name is Paul Martin and I am
a collector of vintage automobiles. I am
calling about a 1960 Chrysler that I
recently purchased that I believe was owned
by yourself and your husband. “ (I did not
know his state of health but as that there
was no phone listing for him, my best
assumption was that he had passed away).
Her response:
“ Do you mean the white Chrysler 300? I
can’t remember exactly what year it was.”
Needless to say I was elated, she remember
the car. Not wanting to press my luck I
explained myself further, apologized for any
intrusion and assured her that I would
follow with a letter with specific
questions. To my delight she was quite
chatty and recalled their ownership of the
car with much detail. She confirmed her
husband Larry has passed away about 6 years
before. After our conversation I composed a
letter with specific questions requested
photos if any and included a picture of the
car with my wife and I in it and our two
dogs.
I received a brief letter about week later
explaining she had gone through some 35mm
slides from the early 60’s and was having
them made into prints. About two weeks after
that her second letter arrived with 6 prints
from 1960 to 1963 showing various family
trips with the car. He letter stated she
enjoyed the trip down memory lane looking at
the photos and had received encouragement
from her children as her daughter knew how
important it was for a “car guy” to obtain
this information.
I was able to put together a nice file with
the photos, registrations and the
correspondence I had received about the car.
Locating any original car is a major find in
the old car hobby. Having the paperwork and
piecing the history together is the biggest
bonus of all. The hunt for the history was
more exciting than buying the car itself.
Once I had all the info I was sad the quest
had ended.
Many thanks go to Gil Cunningham, Ken Diehl,
George Merrick, Jan Landers and especially
Mrs. Pohl for her generosity in sharing her
family treasures with me.

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